Note: This interview originally appeared in
Shivers magazine in August 1997

The
1968 film Night of the Living Dead is widely regarded as a genre
masterpiece. It told a simple story about a plague of zombies
terrorising a group of humans holed up in a remote farmhouse. It was
made on a shoestring $115,000 budget by a novice cast and crew. The
film’s unrelenting tone and bleak denouement captured the zeitgeist of a
country traumatised by the Vietnam war. For its resolutely
Pittsburgh-based director, George Romero, it marked the turning point
between creating 8mm shorts and becoming one of America’s leading
independent film-makers, and one of horror films’ most revered icons.

Interest in the film’s 1978 comic-book style-sequel, Dawn of the Dead,
has been revived by the release of the Dawn of the Dead Director’s
Cut on video. The film is an indirect continuation of the Night
of the Living Dead story, featuring an entirely new group of
characters. It principally concerns a group of human survivors who take
refuge from the ever-increasing zombie army in a shopping mall, a
“temple of consumerism”, where they also have to defend themselves
against marauding gangs of gun-toting bikers. It successfully balances
Romero’s sardonic allegorical commentary on materialism with
unprecedented levels of gore. American critic Roger Ebert called Dawn
“one of the best horror films ever made”, and roundly defended the
film against accusations of depravity.

Romero had resisted pressure to make a sequel to The Night of the
Living Dead, fearing that he might become typecast. But a fortuitous
coincidence of events sparked renewed interest in the project. Romero
was visiting a friend, and was shown around a shopping centre in the
Pittsburgh suburb of Monroeville. “We took a little tour of the mall,
and I was shown these little survival spaces, the disaster shelters.
They were stocked with civil defence supplies: old saltines, old jugs of
water and so forth. It just struck me as so ironic. Here we were living
exuberantly and revelling in the consumerism that was rampant at the
time while upstairs in this mall there’s an atom bomb shelter! I thought
it was pretty funny”.

The idea for Night of the Living Dead had been sparked by Richard
Matheson’s vampire story I Am Legend. Romero wrote a sixty-page
story that paralleled some of Matheson’s themes. The story was the study
of the three phases that a society goes through when a revolutionary
society overthrows the status quo: insurgence, equality and domination.
The story, called Anubis after the Egyptian god who led the dead
to judgement, provided the basis for a trilogy of zombie films, (it
detailed the ideas used in the first two films, and the seed elements of
the third). The visit to the mall prompted a change of setting for the
second part of the film trilogy, from the farmhouse from the original
film to the shopping centre.

“The
visit to the mall gave me an idea and I started to scribble a screenplay
idly. At about the same time, serendipitously, we were approached by
Dario Argento through another Italian producer, Alfredo Cuomo”. They
were sent Romero’s first draft screenplay, and agreed to invest
$750,000, about half the film’s budget, in return for the European
distribution rights. Romero continued to develop his screenplay,
dropping elements that would later be used in Dawn of the Dead’s
1985 sequel, Day of the Dead. This early version of the script
included the idea that the authorities were training the zombies for use
as troops in combat, and was more in keeping with the sombre tone of the
original film.

The script continued to develop, every stage being vetted approvingly by
the Italian producers. At one stage Dawn’s ending mirrored the
downbeat finale of the original film. This version ended with Peter
killing himself after luring away the zombies so that Fran could escape,
and with Fran being accidentally decapitated by the blades of the
helicopter. (These scenes were shot, but it is believed that the footage
no longer exists). Romero reflects on this stage of the film’s
development, “You’re sitting there thinking “Well, it’s supposed to be a
sequel, so doesn’t it have to have this and this and this? Shouldn’t it
have this black ending?” I wrestled with that for a long time and
eventually decided that the whole personality of the film was different,
and wasn’t as bleak this time. I had this conceit about doing a whole
series of films, each made ten years apart, that would try to reflect
something of the decade they were made in. When I made Night it was a
darker time. All the guys we liked over here were being shot. The
seventies was very much “welcome to consumer heaven”. It was the
beginning of the mass market and that sort of herd mentality where you
have to have a brand name. We were still fairly hopeful after the
sixties. Everyone said “Okay, we won. We can stop worrying about it”.
That’s the mood that I was trying to go for, so I opted to let Peter and
Fran live”, he chuckles.

Once the script was finished Romero began casting the four leads. “In
those days we were really limited because of the budget. I never cared
for or wanted to work with stars or named actors, especially in the
zombie films, because I thought that it might be a distraction if the
audience had any preconceptions about the people on the screen. My wife
at the time was working in a restaurant in New York, and she knew a lot
of actors. We cast pretty much from among people that we knew, except
for Ken Foree. In fact two of the guys, Scott Reiniger, the SWAT team
member, and David Emge, the pilot, were guys that worked at that
restaurant.”

Romero got permission to film inside the mall, and production began in
earnest on the 13th of November 1977. “The guy that owned the company
that owned the mall was someone that we always used to pitch to for
investment. He was romanced by the idea of film”. (In fact he appears in
the film, as a rather corpulent zombie).

“We started with all the sequences that were not set in the mall,
including the ones at the beginning of the film, at the tenement block
and at the TV station”. Filming inside the mall itself was postponed
because it was decorated for Christmas, and the schedule was too long to
allow all the scenes to be shot with them still in place. Romero regrets
not being able to set the film at Christmas time, which would have added
a sharper edge to the satire. “It would really have been interesting,
but they needed to take the decorations down. I shot some footage that
was intended for use in the pie fight sequence which included me dressed
in a Santa suit, and my wife Chris dressed as one of Santa’s elves!”

Because the mall was a working location filming was restricted to the
middle of the night. “The shops closed at ten o’clock, but there were a
couple of taverns in there that remained open until one or two, and we
had to shoot around the noise from those. At seven o’clock in the
morning the musak, which seemed to be controlled by some brain in
Antarctica, came on, so we had to quit at that point, because that’s
when they opened the mall for joggers and people with heart conditions
trying to get some exercise! It was a tough shoot. It was real guerrilla
film-making. Everyone was involved, everyone cared about the film and so
everyone had fun.” The mall didn’t open until noon on Sundays, allowing
the unit to shoot the exterior scenes with the trucks in daylight.

The only sets that had to be constructed replicated part of the mall
crawlspace, “We could have shot it inside the mall, but it wouldn’t have
been practical for us to dress it up and smash the windows, so we
re-constructed that in the top floor of a little five-story brownstone
building downtown that was vacant. We just had to build the little room
that housed the skylight.”

Romero asked make-up artist Tom Savini, who had worked with the director
on Martin in 1976, to invent some creative ways of killing the
zombies. Savini also appeared in the film as one of the bikers, Blades.
Most of the other bikers were recruited from the Pagan Bike Club. The
bulk of Savini’s make-up work involved the basic make-up for the dozens
of zombie extras, the so-called “regular” zombies, but his contribution
will be chiefly remembered for the movie’s elaborate splatter effects,
the “specials”. Savini also acted as the film’s stunt co-ordinator, and
was badly injured when a fall from the mall’s balcony was misjudged,
resulting in Savini breaking the blood vessels in his feet. For the
remainder of the filming Savini was restricted to doing the make up from
a wheelchair. Many of the outlandish effects were influenced by Savini’s
experiences as a combat photographer covering the Vietnam war. Savini
credits Dawn of the Dead in helping him cope with the horrors he
witnessed there.

The involvement of Dario Argento, (who had just completed Susperia),
with the film’s production amounted to a little more than a flying visit
to the set, to formally approve Romero’s work rate, and his
participation with Goblin’s score for the European edit.

Filming was completed in February 1978. Romero assembled his first
rough-cut of the film, which contained about half an hour of footage
eventually lost in the fine-tuning process. “I don’t think that that
version exists anywhere. We just had that in interlock, we never printed
it. In those days that’s the way we did it. We couldn’t afford anything
elaborate. We didn’t make copies, or print that early cut, we were just
using work prints. I doubt if anyone could ever reconstruct that.”

The
next step was to find the film a distributor, and in this respect the
company were lucky. The United Film Distribution Company, a division of
United Artists, agreed to distribute the film in its uncut - and
therefore unrated - version; essentially re-treading a route that Romero
had explored with Martin.

“We knew that Dawn was going to be controversial, so we made a
basic cut of the film, finished it, and mixed the soundtrack using
library music and three of four pieces of Goblin, the only ones that had
been delivered to us at the point. We printed this version and went out
and showed it to audiences in New York, using a small ad that we took in
the paper. We invited distributors to come and see it, and that’s the
print that is now being made available as ‘the Director’s Cut’. I’m
happy to put my name to it, because it truly is mine. I’m happy to see
it and I’m happy to be able to own it. It’s the very original version
that I cut. It contains everything that at the time I thought was usable
and that worked. It’s cruder; it’s largely scored with library music and
some of the cutting isn’t where it ended up. It‘s not bloodier. I hope
that people aren’t going to be disappointed for that reason. Most of the
stuff in it that make it different are little bits of dialogue that we
cut out here and there, mostly little shades. It was the tool that we
used to try and get distributors interested.” It’s this early version,
the one screened at the 1978 Cannes Film Festival, that is now being
released on video in the UK by BMG, albeit with a few BBFC edits.

In the US the film was released, unrated, in April 1979. In the UK the
film was initially presented to the BBFC using Argento’s leaner edit,
which emphasised the gore at the expense of Romero’s satire and
slapstick; a version also known as Zombie and Zombies: Dawn of
the Dead. These variations eliminate the original film’s stock
music, and supplements the film with more music from Goblin. The film
was promoted with the chilling tag-line “When there’s no more room in
HELL the dead will walk the EARTH”, and opened in the UK in January 1980
with the expected X certificate.

“As part of the financing deal our Italian partners had the right to cut
the film down, and Dario did,” Romero laughs. “he left in every bit of
the blood and cut out dialogue sequences and most of the humour. I don’t
think he thought that humour had a place in a film like this, especially
the overt material that ours had, like the pie fight. So he took those
elements out. I think that the BBFC looked at Dario’s version and wanted
to cut out thirteen minutes, which sent the British distributors,
Target, into panic. They decided to submit the American version, which
was passed with only a couple of minutes cut, because the humour and the
satire softened the film and made the BBFC more lenient. They realised
that this wasn’t just meant to be a celebration of red: profondo rosso!”

Now
there are at least three noticeably different versions of the film in
circulation, (and that excludes additional variations caused by
censorship edits in various territories). When the film was
double-billed with Creepshow in 1983 fifty edits were made to
bring the film down to match Creepshow’s R rating.

The film was very successful. “I’ve heard reports anywhere from sixty to
a hundred million dollars. It’s almost impossible to keep accurate
counts. I just have a percentage of the profits, and that’s taken from
what’s sent back to the producer. That’s where the problem is: I think
that at every point along the way somebody people keep a little change.”
Romero sounds more disappointed than bitter.

Romero’s experiences on Day of the Dead were frustrating and
unhappy. His ambitions were thwarted when it became apparent that the
film would not be released with a commercially desirable R rating,
which, in turn, caused the film’s budget to be cut back.

Romero returned to making zombie films in 1990 when he produced Tom
Savini’s directorial debut, a re-make of Night of the Living Dead.
It was partly an attempt to regain some control over the original film,
which had accidentally fallen into public ownership. “Originally the
film was called Night of the Flesh Eaters, and we had made the
mistake, being rather naive, of putting our copyright notice in the head
credits rather than at the tail. When the original distributor changed
the title to Night of the Living Dead they assumed that the
notice was in the end credits, and they never put a copyright notice up
front. The lawyers are still arguing. I think it might be a no win
situation. I was never separated from it, in terms of my career, but the
company that produced the original film, a commune of twenty-eight
people, are still wondering why we didn’t make any money. For a lot of
the other people it was the first time they were involved in anything.
Many of them never went on to do anything else, and it’s the only thing
they’ve got. Because of the ongoing problems about the original film’s
ownership, we were worried that “if we don’t re-make it someone else
will”. It was the same thing with the colorized version that we
produced. Those weren’t ideas that I had, and they certainly weren’t
things that I particularly wanted to do. I didn’t want to stop the other
investors from benefiting from them, and so I figured I’d rather be
involved than just let it happen.”

Romero’s
experiences with his 1985 film Day of the Dead haven’t ruled out the
possibility of another zombie film, perhaps the rumoured Twilight of
the Dead. “I’d love to do another one set in the ‘nineties, but
there are too many fingers in the pie. Everyone wants fifty-one percent.
There are too many interested parties: too many companies, too may
individuals. Everyone wants a piece of the action. I’ve tried to resist
working within the Hollywood system, but you can’t entirely.”

At various stages Romero’s name has been attached to several notable
projects that ended up being handled by other directors, including the
adaptations of three Stephen King novels; Pet Semetary (1989), The
Stand (1994) and Salem’s Lot (1979). His friendship with King resulted in
the anthology film
Creepshow in 1982 and The Dark Half in 1993.

Romero’s experiences on his 1988 film Monkey Shines, (which was
considerably altered at the request of the studio), have obviously left
some wounds. “I’ve had to do my penance. I’ve basically been working for
the studios for the last few years. Not making movies, but writing them,
going through development and all the stuff that you hear about. It’s
been very, very frustrating, but I’ve just finished writing a couple of
new spec things that hopefully I can do myself for very little money.”

Surprisingly Romero claims that there’s little demand for another …of
the Dead film. “All of a sudden horror is hot again and my phone’s
ringing off of the wall because of Scream. It makes me laugh. I’m
working on a film that’s probably in that genre, but I think that it’s
got a little more going for it. The one I’m talking about has a title
which is really obvious, that someone might… the title gives it away,
basically. It’s a little too early for me to talk about them.”

He sighs regretfully when asked whether he’s talking about his
long-planned remake of The Mummy, which has been thrown in limbo
by the vacillations of the studio money men. “That was probably the
biggest disappointment of my life, because I loved the script. They
never know what they want. They’ve gone through so many incarnations. It
was “Let’s make it like The Hitcher. Let’s make it like this.
Let’s make it like that”, whatever the current hit was. The various
administrations at Universal, (where, after all, the great cinematic
monsters originally came from), never really had any faith in their
heritage, and never had the vision to develop their franchises. When
other studios finally got around to remaking the classic tales, with
Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein and Bram Stoker’s Dracula, they
were hundred million dollar epics, and none of them were made by
Universal. The Mummy was the only one left. No-one could ever decide
what to do with it. Nobody would leave it alone or say “let’s just make
a modest little Mummy movie out of it”. No-one sat down and looked at
the fundamental reasons why the Mummy was scary. You can imagine the
sort of conversations. It’s pretty hard to find people that understand
the genre well enough. Unless it’s some new idea like a doll that’s
alive, or Freddy or anything like that, they don’t get it. They don’t
really want to take the chance of funding a reasonably-budgeted film.
They either want it to be very inexpensive, or it’s got to be a hundred
million bucks and star Robert DeNiro.”

That’s not to say that Romero wouldn’t be interested in directing a big
budget movie. “I’d have to look at the conditions and the circumstances.
I certainly don’t resist things just for the hell of it. Usually those
things come so encumbered. These things are basically run by committees
and the values that they want to promote are not my cup of tea. I’d be
the first one to come and sit down and talk about it. I have no
prejudice about using more money, it’s just usually that it’s usually so
damned expensive.”

DIARY OF THE DEAD - PRESS NOTES

Courtesy of Optimum Releasing

In his first independently produced
zombie film in over two decades, George A. Romero returns to ground zero
in the history of the living dead. When a group of film students making
a horror movie in the woods discovers that the dead have begun to
revive, they turn their cameras on the real-life horrors that suddenly
confront them, creating a first person diary of their bloody encounters
and the disintegration of everything they hold dear.

Told with Romero's pitch-black humor and
an unflinching eye on our post-Katrina world, George A. Romero's
Diary of the Dead marks the noted filmmaker's return to his roots.

SYNOPSIS

The
master of horror returns to the kind of filmmaking he pioneered and the
genre he invented. In his first independent zombie film in over twenty
years, George A. Romero takes us back to ground zero in the history of
the living dead.

Jason Creed and a small crew of college
filmmakers are in the Pennsylvania woods making a no-budget horror film
when they hear the terrifying news that the dead have started returning
to life.

Led by Jason's girlfriend, Debra, the
frightened young filmmakers set off in a friend's old Winnebago to try
to get back to the only safety and security they know: their homes. But
there is no escape from the crisis, nor any real home for them anymore.
Everything they depend upon, all that they hold dear, is fractured as
the plague of the living dead begins to spread.

Jason documents the true-life horrors in
a tense, first-person style that heightens the reality of each
encounter. Even as his friends die, even as they are attacked by
ravenous walking corpses at every stop along the way, Jason keeps
filming, an obsessive, unflinching eye in the midst of chaos.

The government first denies, then
promises to quell the crisis, but can’t. Technology fails. Communication
with the rest of the world becomes impossible. Jason and what remains of
his crew end up on their own, a handful of lucky survivors, reliant on
no one but themselves to stay alive. They take final refuge in a
fortress of a mansion, but their sanctuary turns out to be a trap from
which there is no escape. Throughout it all, the cameras keep rolling,
recording every detail for future generations…if any survive.

ABOUT THE CAST

Michelle
Morgan (Debra) has worked steadily on both stage and screen for the past
few years in a variety of roles. Her numerous screen credits include
Across the River To Motor City, Final 24, The Smart
Woman’s Survival Guide, Alien Fire and Road Rage. She
has honed her acting skills onstage
in such diverse plays as Shakespeare’s The Merchant of Venice,
Goldini’s Servant of Two Masters as well as When We Dead
Awaken with John Neville, The Bacchae, Fly and Two
Rooms. She currently lives in Toronto.

Josh Close's (Jason) acting debut was in
the independent film, In the Lair, but he first won widespread
attention with K-19: The Widowmaker when he was cast alongside
one of his screen idols, Harrison Ford. His co-starring roles in The
Exorcism of Emily Rose, with Laura Linney and Tom Wilkinson,
and A Home At The End of the World, with Colin Farrell and Robin
Wright Penn, have established him as a versatile actor whose star is on
the rise. Other film credits include Full of It, The Plague,
and Haunted. His many television appearances include a recurring
role on ABC’s Life As We Know It. He currently lives in Los
Angeles.

Shawn Roberts (Tony) began acting
professionally at age 12 in the CBC series Emily of New Moon,
produced by Academy Award-winner Michael Donovan. Roberts went on to
amass numerous diverse credits, including Land of the Dead
directed by George A. Romero for Universal Pictures, X Men
directed by Bryan Singer for Twentieth Century Fox, Skinwalkers
for director Jim Isaac, Jumper for director Doug Liman, and
Cheaper By The Dozen 2.

Roberts’ television credits include
Stone Cold opposite Tom Selleck for CBS, Degrassi: The Next
Generation, We Were the Mulvaneys for Lifetime and a
recurring role on ABC Family's Falcon Beach. He lives in both
Toronto and Los Angeles.

Amy Lalonde (Tracy), a former high school
arts teacher and Queen’s University drama major, is no stranger to the
world of horror, having been an associate producer, head writer and host
for two seasons at Scream (Corus Entertainment), a movie channel devoted
to thriller, horror, and suspense films.
Her screen credits include: Battlestar Galactica, Mutant X,
Queer as Folk, Beautiful People, LoveBites,
Murder in the Hamptons, and Kevin Hill. Recently, she
completed a role in the feature film 5ive Girls opposite Ron
Perlman. Amy also keeps busy as a highly sought-after commercial print
model. She lives in Toronto.

Joe Dinicol (Eliot), though still a young
man, is already an industry veteran having started as a child actor on a
number of Canadian television series. From family fare such as Real
Kids, Real Adventures, The Famous Jett Jackson, The
Facts of Life, Jacob Two-Two Meets the Hooded Fang to popular
shows like Eerie, Indiana, Rideau Hall, and Train 48,
Dinicol is no stranger to the rigors of being cast in a principal role.
He has also been the lead in a number of feature films including Kart
Racer, The Marsh, and Weirdsville, directed by Allan
Moyle. He lives in Toronto.

Scott Wentworth (Maxwell), a versatile
veteran of both stage and screen who has worked throughout the United
States and Canada, brings both levity and gravity to Diary of the
Dead in his professorial role. An acclaimed regular at the
prestigious Stratford Festival, he has played the title roles in
Macbeth, Henry IV, and The Brothers Karamazov. On the
Broadway stage, he was Uncle Louis in Lost in Yonkers, Count
Vronsky in Anna Karenina and most recently, Bates in Welcome
to the Club, which garnered him a Tony nomination. Wentworth is also
no stranger to motion pictures and television. His credits include: Ang
Lee’s The Ice Storm, NBC’s The Terry Anderson Story,
Elizabeth Rex, and the award-winning series Law & Order. He
lives in Toronto.

Philip Riccio (Ridley) is an actor in
high demand on both stage and screen. His diverse theatre work includes
roles at the Stratford Festival in Henry IV Part I and Henry
IV Part II and as Soulpepper in Hamlet. Among his other stage
credits are Unidentified Human Remains and The True Nature of
Love, Love’s Labour Lost, Don Juan, and the
Doranominated Company Theatre production of A Whistle in the Dark.
He has had principal roles onscreen in Bookey’s Mark, Puppets
Who Kill and was the lead in the WB’s A Windigo Tale. Riccio
is a series lead in the popular Showcase television hit Rent-A-Goalie.
He lives in Toronto.

Chris Violette (Gordo) who is best known
for his role as Blue Ranger Sky in the popular television series
Power Rangers has also appeared in Degrassi: The Next Generation,
Wild Card, and Queer as Folk. Chris' film credits include
Labou directed by Greg Aronowitz, and he will be featured in
Return to Sleepaway Camp directed by Robert Hiltzik to be released
this year.

Tatiana Maslany (Mary) is a versatile
actress, who loves improv comedy and is a member of a number of troupes
including the General Food Improvisational Theatre and Anoetic Improv.
She is an alumnus of the Canadian Improv Games. A native of Regina,
Saskatchewan, Tatiana portrayed the Ghost in Ginger
Snaps 2: Unleashed and has appeared in The Messengers, The
Robber Bride and the thriller Stir of Echoes: The Homecoming.

ABOUT THE FILMMAKERS

George
A. Romero (writer-director) is considered the father of the modern
horror film. His first feature, Night of the Living Dead (1968),
redefined the genre, not only with its explicit violence, but also with
a satirical view of American society that reflected the turmoil of the
times. Known for his intelligence, innovation and sensitivity as a
filmmaker, in addition to his ability to scare, Romero made short films,
industrials and commercials before co-writing, directing, filming and
editing Night of the Living Dead. The film, made on a budget of
$114,000, is a stark parable of the American family consuming itself and
still retains the power to shock and surprise.

Romero made several other low-budget
films in Pittsburgh before solidifying his reputation with two
remarkable films: Martin (1978), a lyrical, poignant and deeply
disturbing story of a lonely boy who is convinced he is a vampire, and
Dawn of the Dead (1979), set in a suburban shopping mall where a
band of struggling survivors is beset by zombies and their own personal
demons. A powerful, apocalyptic action film leavened with Romero’s
signature pitch-black wit, the movie became one of the most profitable
independent productions in film history.

He continued to do interesting work
throughout the 80s and 90s with Knightriders (1981), a heartfelt
film based on Arthurian legend, in which Ed Harris plays the leader of a
troupe that stages medieval fairs with knights jousting on motorcycles
instead of horses; Creepshow (1982), a smart and boldly stylized
film with a script by Stephen King and a cast of well-known actors; and
1985's Day of the Dead, a progressive, eerily claustrophobic
film, the third in Romero's zombie saga.

In 1988, Monkey Shines became
Romero's first studio-produced film and introduced him to Peter Grunwald,
with whom he eventually formed Romero-Grunwald Productions. The film was
hailed by Newsweek as a “white-knuckle triumph.” Two Evil Eyes
(1990) was a collaboration with filmmaker Dario Argento, comprising two
vignettes inspired by Edgar Allan Poe short stories. 1993's The Dark
Half starred Tim Hutton in a superb dual performance. The film, like
much of Romero's work, was praised by critics and is considered among
the most thoughtful of the many Stephen King adaptations.

In 2000 Romero made Bruiser, a
taught, frightening and highly original tale of revenge, which at the
time was his most exciting, stylish and accomplished film. Land of
the Dead was released by Universal Pictures in June 2005 and
garnered exceptional critical acclaim in addition to becoming one of the
most successful of Romero's films at the box office. In the fall of 2006
Romero embarked on Diary of the Dead, his most personal film
since Night of the Living Dead. He proudly describes it as one
that “comes from my heart. It's not a sequel or a remake. It's a whole
new beginning for the dead.”

Peter Grunwald (Producer) began his
career at 15 as a production assistant on Otto Preminger's Such Good
Friends. Two years later, he wrote and directed a short subject,
The Vendor, for producer Steve Tisch, which led to an association
with Robert Evans at Paramount Pictures, where Grunwald worked on such
films as Chinatown, Marathon Man, and Black Sunday.

Grunwald became a story editor at
Paramount before establishing an editorial consulting firm that included
Ken McCormick, the legendery publisher of Roots, among its
clients. Grunwald returned to film work as Vice President of Charles
Evans Productions, which developed and produced Tootsie, and
served as executive producer of Monkey Shines, written and
directed by George Romero, with whom he began a long-term collaboration.
Romero-Grunwald Productions, the development and production company
formed by the two, has produced the films Bruiser, Land of the
Dead, and Diary of the Dead.

Artur Spigel (Producer) founded 7ate9
Entertainment, a Hollywood-based multi-platform production agency
focused on youth entertainment, in 1997. The company is known as an
innovator in the world of television and youth marketing, producing and
directing thousands of award-winning productions for networks including
Disney, MTV, and Cartoon Network. In 2004, Art founded Artfire Films
with his partner, Dan Fireman. Artfire is a film production and
financing company specializing in director-driven, independent projects.
Through Artfire, Art is producing a number of films, most recently
George A. Romero’s Diary of The Dead.

Sam Englebardt (Producer) is a Vice
President in the Private Clients practice at Bernstein Global Wealth
Management, where he works as a financial advisor to high net worth
individuals, families and foundations. He was formerly Executive Vice
President and General Counsel at Artfire Films and was a founding
partner of Arrival Cinema, where he produced and executive produced
several acclaimed films, including Paris, je t’aime, a collective
film set in Paris, with segments directed by some of the world’s
top directors, and Edmond, adapted from David Mamet’s play, directed by
Stuart Gordon, starring William H. Macy and Julia Stiles. Englebardt
graduated from Harvard Law School and is a licensed attorney in
California. He graduated Summa Cum Laude and Phi Beta Kappa from the
University of Colorado at Boulder with a degree in Philosophy and
Political Science and studied Philosophy, Politics and Economics at
Oxford University.

Ara Katz (Producer) began producing films
after graduating magna cum laude from Tufts University. Her first
feature, Sexual Dependency, sold worldwide and garnered critical
acclaim, ultimately receiving the Oscar nomination from Bolivia in 2003.
Soon after the success of her first feature, Ara founded Arrival Cinema,
where she has produced and executive produced a number of projects, most
notably, Paris, je t’aime. In 2006, Arrival Cinema was folded
into the producing and financing company, Artfire Films,
where Ara serves as the Executive Vice President of Production and
Development.

Dan Fireman (Executive Producer) is a
partner in Artfire Films, the entity that financed and joined with
Romero-Grunwald Productions to bring Diary of the Dead to the
screen. Fireman’s passion to support filmmakers with an independent
voice is what attracted him to the film business and it his business and
financial acumen that will be integral to Artfire’s growth in the motion
picture industry. Although primarily an asset manager and real estate
developer-builder, he has been involved with such high-profile
documentaries as the Academy Award-winning Born into Brothels and
the Oscar-nominatedMurderball. In his role as President & CEO of Willowbend
Development, LLC Fireman is presently overseeing the residential
development at Liberty National, a New Jersey waterfront property that
overlooks the Statue of Liberty and the Manhattan skyline and boasts
three residential towers and a world-class golf course. Other Willowbend
properties include: Willowbend Country Club – a private residential golf
community on Cape Cod; The Westin Rio Mar Beach Resort & Golf Club in
Puerto Rico and The Starr Pass Marriott in Tucson, Arizona.

John Harrison (Executive Producer) began
his career directing rock videos and working as a First Assistant
Director for George A. Romero. He wrote and directed multiple episodes
of Romero's classic TV series, Tales From The Darkside, before
helming Paramount Pictures’ Tales From the Darkside, The Movie
for which he won the Grand Prix du Festival at Avoriaz, France. Harrison
has written and directed television episodes and world premiere movies
for HBO, NBC and FOX. He wrote and directed SciFi Channel’s six-hour
miniseries adaptations of Frank Herbert's bestseller, Dune, and
its follow up, Children of Dune, both of which were Emmy-winners.
He co-wrote Disney’s animated feature, Dinosaur, and adapted
Clive Barker’s fantasy novels, Abarat, for Disney. Harrison is
now in pre-production on the film adaptation of Barker’s Book of
Blood, which he will direct from his own
screenplay.

Steve Barnett (Executive Producer) is
currently Senior Vice President of Production and Development at
Dimension Films, where he recently developed and managed the production
of The Mist, based on a Stephen King novella, which was adapted
for the screen and directed by Frank Darabont. Prior to joining
Dimension, he was Executive Vice President of Production for Atmosphere
Entertainment MM, where he was instrumental in the production of four
major studio films: 300, released by Warner Bros Pictures; The
Spiderwick Chronicles, for Paramount Pictures; Full Of It, a
teen comedy released by New Line Cinema; and George A. Romero’s Land
of The Dead for Universal Pictures. Before Atmosphere, Barnett was a
Senior Vice President of Production at Artists Production Group, the
film production unit of Michael Ovitz’s Artists Management Group, where
he was instrumental in building the company’s film development
department.